that if anyone else had to face a mess like this, the piles of pots, pans, dishes, glasses would be daunting at best, tedious at worst. But for her it was a novel chore, and therefore entertaining.
Shane strolled in, thumbs hooked in his pockets. âLooks like Iâd better roll up my sleeves.â
âYou donât need to pitch in.â Rebecca was working theproblem of fitting everything into the racks of the dishwasher into a geometric equation. âIâve got it.â
âEverybody else is tied up with kids or pregnant wives. Iâm all youâve got.â So he did roll up his sleeves. âAre you going to put the dishes in there, or study it all night?â
âIâm working on a system.â Fairly satisfied with it, Rebecca began to load. âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm going to wash the pans.â
She paused, her eyes narrowing a bit as she recalculated. âThat would be simpler.â She caught a whiff of lemon from the soap he squirted into the hot running water. But when she bent over, her bottom bumped his thigh and had her straightening again.
âClose quarters around the sink,â he said with an easy grin.
To offset it, she merely walked to the other side of the dishwasher and worked from there. âSo, is flirting with women a vocation or an avocation?â
âItâs a pleasure.â
âMmm⦠Isnât it awkward, in a small town, to juggle women?â
âI guess it would be, if you thought of them as rubber balls instead of people.â
She nodded as she meticulously arranged dishes. It would be, she mused, interesting and educational to delve into the mind of a ladiesâ man. âIâll rephrase that. Isnât it awkward to begin or end a relationship in a small town where people appear to know a great deal about other peopleâs business?â
âNot if you do it right. Is this another study, Rebecca?â
She straightened again, battling a flush because it had been just that. âIâm sorry. Really. Thatâs a terrible habit of mineâpicking things apart. Just say, âButt out, Rebecca.ââ
âButt out, Rebecca.â
Because there had been no sting in the order, she laughed and got back to work. âWhat if I just say I think you have a wonderful and interesting family, and I enjoyed meeting all of them?â
âThat would be fine. Iâm fond of them myself.â
âIt shows.â She looked up, lips curved. âAnd it almost makes me think thereâs more to you than a woman-chasing farm boy. I enjoyed watching all of you together, the interaction, the shorthand conversations, the little signals.â
He set a pan into the drainer. âIs that what you were doing when I caught you at dinner? Making observations on the MacKades in their natural milieu?â
Her smile faded a little. âNo, actually, I was thinking of something else entirely.â Suddenly restless, she picked up a damp cloth and walked away to wipe off the stove. âI do need to talk to you about making arrangements to work at the farm. I realize you have a routine, and a private life. I donât intend to get in your way.â
But you will, he thought. Heâd suspected it before, but that quick glimpse of sadness in her eyes moments ago had confirmed it. He was a sucker for a woman with secrets and sad stories.
âI told Regan you could come and work there, so Iâm stuck with it.â
She shrugged her shoulder. âItâs important enough to me that I canât worry overmuch about it making you uncomfortable.â When she glanced back at him, her eyes were cool again, faintly mocking. âYouâll be out in the field most of the time, wonât you? Baling hay, or whatever?â
âOr whatever.â Damned if she wasnât pulling his strings, he thought. Both of her. For he was certain there were two women in there, and he